Feedback Search Site Map
Air Products Products Customer Support Technology About Us Investor Info Corporate Responsibility Career Opportunities Press Room APDirect
Welcome 
 
Overview 
Applications 
Distribution Options 
History 
Fast Facts 
Safety Information 
 
Site home 
Air Products Home 

Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.--Products--Liquid Bulk Gases--Oxygen Elemental Facts

 
Elemental Facts
 

Oxygen
For combustion

   
O2 guy
Atomic Number: 8
Atomic Symbol: O
Atomic Weight: 15.9994
Electron Configuration: [He]2s22p4

History
For many centuries, workers occasionally realized air was composed of more than one component. The behavior of oxygen and nitrogen as components of air led to the advancement of the phlogiston theory of combustion, which captured the minds of chemists for a century. Oxygen was prepared by several workers, including Bayen and Borch, but they did not know how to collect it, did not study its properties, and did not recognize it as an elementary substance.

Priestley is generally credited with its discovery, although Scheele also discovered it independently.

Its atomic weight was used as a standard of comparison for each of the other elements until 1961 when the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry adopted carbon 12 as the new basis.

Sources
Oxygen is the third most abundant element found in the sun, and it plays a part in the carbon-nitrogen cycle, the process once thought to give the sun and stars their energy. Oxygen under excited conditions is responsible for the bright red and yellow-green colors of the Aurora.

A gaseous element, oxygen forms 21% of the atmosphere by volume and is obtained by liquefaction and fractional distillation. The atmosphere of Mars contains about 0.15% oxygen. The element and its compounds make up 49.2%, by weight, of the earth's crust. About two thirds of the human body and nine tenths of water is oxygen.

In the laboratory it can be prepared by the electrolysis of water or by heating potassium chlorate with manganese dioxide as a catalyst.

Properties
The gas is colorless, odorless, and tasteless. The liquid and solid forms are a pale blue color and are strongly paramagnetic.

Forms
Ozone (O3), a highly active compound, is formed by the action of an electrical discharge or ultraviolet light on oxygen.

Ozone's presence in the atmosphere (amounting to the equivalent of a layer 3 mm thick under ordinary pressures and temperatures) helps prevent harmful ultraviolet rays of the sun from reaching the earth's surface. Pollutants in the atmosphere may have a detrimental effect on this ozone layer. Ozone is toxic and exposure should not exceed 0.2 mg/m# (8-hour time-weighted average—40-hour work week). Undiluted ozone has a bluish color. Liquid ozone is bluish black and solid ozone is violet-black.

Compounds
Oxygen, which is very reactive, is a component of hundreds of thousands of organic compounds and combines with most elements.

Uses
Plants and animals rely on oxygen for respiration. Hospitals frequently prescribe oxygen for patients with respiratory ailments.

Isotopes
Oxygen has nine isotopes. Natural oxygen is a mixture of three isotopes.

Natural occurring oxygen 18 is stable and available commercially, as is water (H2O with 15% 18O). Commercial oxygen consumption in the U.S. is estimated at 20 million short tons per year and the demand is expected to increase substantially.

Oxygen for steelmaking accounts for the greatest use of the gas. Large quantities are also used in making synthesis gas for ammonia and methanol, ethylene oxide, and for oxy-acetylene welding.

Air separation plants produce about 99% of the gas, while electrolysis plants produce about 1%.

(Information found at: http://pearl1.lanl.gov/periodic/elements/8.html.
Sources: CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics and the American Chemical Society.)

About oxygen: